The Unfinished Book Movement is a spiritual organization, formed in 2956 and located in the Federated Suns, that seeks to combine the wisdom of multiple faiths in one overarching work (referred to as the Unfinished Book), based on the original goal of its founder to promote total peace through collaboration of inter-faith religious study.[1]

Various faiths' religious leaders examine a volume of the Unfinished Book

The first project of the congress to be published was the Unfinished Book, a ten-volume collection of scripture from numerous religions, released in 2959.[1][2] It received its name from the concept that spiritual wisdom was extremely vast and therefore the project would take an undetermined amount of time to accumulate it in totality. Father Ovidon held the belief that if the project could be completed, then all of humanity would enjoy peaceful coexistence, either from divine intervention or possibly from the intellectual elevation of mankind.[1]

The first edition of the Unfinished Book became a bestseller within the Federated Suns and resulted in numerous people from all faiths and philosophies volunteering their services to the congress, challenged by the idea of completing the project. Following the death of Ovidon in 2966, the project continued under the leadership of Lama Potec. As of 3028, the movement had become quite large, with a determined following that seemed like a quasi-religious order in structure. Younger members proudly wore a symbol of the movement that depicted an open book set against the Federated Sunburst. The accumulation of the various groups of people involved defied categorization or description, with even religious faith not exhibited as a prerequisite; political views and social classes are as widely represented as the bases of faith.[1]

ComStar exhibited some concern over development of the Unfinished Book Movement, due to the perceived competition in the pool for spiritual-based candidates, indicating that some potential recruits were swayed away from their Terra-based organization. Further apprehension was leveled at the political sway the movement had started demonstrating, with such examples as the appointing of qualified Congressional priests as the official chaplains of the Davion military and published articles written by the Movement questioning the purposes of ComStar, with less than complimentary descriptions. The unease felt by ComStar manifested in protests to the Davion government, though they were reportedly not addressed to their satisfaction.[1]

The Jewish faith was debating joining the Federated Inter-Faith Congress in 3028 (and continued the debate into 3067), due to the reluctance some conservative faithful had over the perceived synthesis of the major religions by the Movement, though the liberal Jews were welcoming of the notion that greater discourse bred understanding.[3][4] Similarly, by 3067, some Christian denominations that had felt God's influence would be destroyed by the efforts of the Movement had combined to form the Christian Faith Council.[5]

Hanse Davion's coronation in 3013 utilized a new fifth edition of the Unfinished Book for the swearing of his oath, rather than the traditional Christian Bible. This demonstration led to a large increase in numbers, many from upper levels of society and government.[1][2]